From Francis Dana

[dateline] St: PetersbourgSeptr 20th/<31> 1782 OS. [1 October N.S.]

[salute] My dear Sir

I have no time to write you by this post.1 Your Son is in good health, but I fear he will not find an opportunity to leave this
terrestial paradise before the first snows. Mr: Thaxter's letter of the 21.7 and 31st.
of Augt: has come to hand, but no tidings yet of the picture.2 Pray by whom did you send it? Nothing of importance stirring here. How goes on your
negotiation for Peace? Do our Enemies seek it with seriousness? Let me know something about it. If I thought there was not a prospect of a Peace this Winter, I wou'd certainly
leave this Country with your Son, and return with all good speed to our own. Remember
your Treaty.

1. Although he does not mention it, enclosed with this letter was the original of Dana's
letter of 18/29 Sept. to Robert R. Livingston (MHi: Francis Dana Letterbook, Official Letters, 1781–1782). This letter is not in the
PCC, and Dana wrote in the margin of the LbC that “This letter is not to be found on the Files of the Office of Foreign Affairs,
among my letters.” The letter primarily concerned trade and Dana's efforts to allay
fears that an independent America would become a serious commercial rival of Russia.
Dana indicated this was an important issue because the possibility of a Russian-American
commercial rivalry “was maintained by both Friends and Foes tho' with very different
views.” Dana was referring to the French and British and promised to explain himself
later, for which see his letters of [4 Oct.] and [26 Oct.] to JA, both below.

2. Dana refers to two letters that he received on 29 September. The first was begun on
21 Aug. and completed on the 27th; the second, dated 31 Aug., was finished and sent
on 6 Sept. (MHi: Dana Family Papers). The portion done on 27 Aug. is an account of JA's negotiation of the Dutch-American Treaty of Amity and Commerce, and specifically
of JA's opposition to the inclusion in the treaty of the Dutch placard of 1756 regulating
the entry of prizes into Dutch ports. In the letter he began on 31 Aug., Thaxter indicated
that JA wished to know if the miniature of George Washington had arrived yet. For the placard
of 1756 and JA's objections to its inclusion, see The Negotiation of the Dutch-American Treaty of
Amity and Commerce, 22 Aug. – 8 Oct., Nos. III and IV, above.